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1.
Intact erythrocytes were spin-labeled with various classes of phospholipid label. The ESR spectrum for phosphatidylcholine spin label was distinctly different from those for phosphatidylserine, phosphatidylethanolamine, phosphatidylglycerol and phosphatidic acid spin labels. The overall splitting for the former (52.5 G) was markedly larger than those for the others (approx. 47 G), suggesting a more rigid phosphatidylcholine bilayer phase and more fluid phosphatidylethanolamine and phosphatidylserine phases in the erythrocyte membrane. Evidence for asymmetric distribution of phospholipids in the membrane was obtained. Spin-labeled phosphatidylcholine incorporated into erythrocytes was reduced immediately by cystein and Fe3+, while the reduction of spin-labeled phosphatidylserine was very slow. The present results therefore suggest asymmetric fluidity in erythrocyte membrane; a more rigid outer layer and a more fluid inner layer. The heterogeneity in the lipid structure was also manifested in the temperature dependence of the fluidity. The overall splitting for phosphatidylcholine spin label showed two inflection points at 18 and 33 °C, while that for phosphatidylserine spin label had only one transition at 30 °C.When the spin-labeled erythrocytes were hemolyzed, the marked difference in the ESR spectra disappeared, indicating homogenization of the heterogeneous fluidity. Mg2+ or Mg2++ATP prevented the hemolysis-induced spectral changes. Ca2+ did not prevent the homogenization and acted antagonistically to Mg2+. The heterogeneity preservation by Mg2+ was nullified by trypsin, pronase or N-ethylmaleimide added inside the cell. Some inner proteins may therefore be involved in maintaining the heterogeneous structure. The protecting action of Mg2+ was dependent on hemolysis temperature, starting to decrease at 18 °C and vanishing at 40 °C. The present study suggests that the heterogeneity in the fluidity of intact erythrocyte membranes arises from interactions between lipids and proteins in the membrane and also from interactions between the membrane constituents and the inner proteins. Concentration of cholesterol in the outer layer may also partly contribute to the heterogeneity.  相似文献   

2.
The effect of benzyl alcohol on the transverse mobility and repartition of phospholipids in the human erythrocyte membrane was investigated using electron spin resonance and morphological modification of red blood cells. Transmembrane internalization rates and equilibrium distribution in red blood cells of short-chain spin-labeled phosphatidylcholine, phosphatidylethanolamine and phosphatidylserine were strongly modified by treatment with 10-70 mM benzyl alcohol. A dual effect was observed: (a) at 4 degrees C and 37 degrees C there was an N-ethylmaleimide-sensitive, long lasting and fully reversible increase in the spin-labeled phosphatidylserine and phosphatidylethanolamine internalization rate; (b) at 37 degrees C, an enhancement of N-ethylmaleimide-insensitive fluxes of all the labeled phospholipids through the membrane occurred. Both effects were dose-dependent. Erythrocytes submitted to benzyl alcohol incubation also showed dose-dependent shape changes: an immediate one from discocytes to echinocytes, followed by a slower N-ethylmaleimide- and ATP-dependent change to stomatocytes. Moreover, benzyl alcohol treatment was shown to lead to enhanced hydrolysis of intracellular ATP. All the effects of benzyl alcohol can be described as an accumulation of labeled phosphatidylethanolamine (and labeled phosphatidylcholine at 37 degrees C) in the inner leaflet. This can be interpreted as a perturbation of the erythrocyte membrane, leading to an energy-consuming specific increase in aminophospholipid translocase activity, in addition to a slow and passive bidirectional flux of all phospholipids at 37 degrees C.  相似文献   

3.
Spin-labeled phosphatidylcholine was incorporated into the membrane of isolated "inner membrane+matrix" particles of rat liver mitochondria by incubation with sonicated spin-labeled phosphatidylcholine vesicles at 22 degrees C. When the spin label was on the acyl chain the incorporation of phosphatidylcholine into the membrane was stimulated by the presence of the phosphatidylcholine exchange protein extracted from rat or beef liver. On the other hand no stimulation was observed when the nitroxide was on the polar head-group. When spin-labeled phosphatidycholine was incorporated into the mitochondrial membrane in the absence of phosphatidylcholine exchange protein, ascorbate treatment at 0 degrees C reduced the EPR signal of the spin-labeled membranes by approximately 50%, indicating that fusion incorporates molecules equally on both sides of the membrane. On the other hand when spin-labeled phosphatidylcholine was incorporated in the presence of the exchange protein most of the EPR signal could be destroyed by the ascorbate treatment at 0 degrees C, indicating that the spin-labeled phosphatidylcholine had been selectively incorporated in the outer layer of the membrane. Finally when the label is on the polar head-group the inner content of mitochondria reduces the label facing the matrix, thus creating again an anisotropy of the labeling. The anisotropic distribution of spin-labeled phosphatidylcholine in the mitochondrial membrane was found to be stable at 25 degrees C for more than 2 h. It is therefore concluded that the rate of outside-inside and inside-outside transitions are extremely slow (half-life greater than 24 h).  相似文献   

4.
Spin labeled analogs of phosphatidylcholine were used to study the transverse diffusion (flip-flop) of phospholipids in the erythrocyte membrane. The nitroxide spin label was placed either on the beta acyl chain or on the choline group. These labeled phosphatidylcholine molecules were incorporated into the membrane by incubation of the red cells at 22 degrees C with sonicated spin-labed phosphatidylcholine vesicles from which all traces of free fatty acids and lyso derivatives were carefully removed by bovine serum albumin treatment. This incorporation did not provide any change in the morphology of the cell as indicated by scanning electron microscopy. When spin-labeled phosphatidylcholine, having a nitroxide on the beta chain but near the polar head-group, was incorporated into the erythrocyte membrane, ascorbate treatment at 0 degrees C allows selective reduction of the signal coming from the outer layer of the membrane. When the label was on the polar head-group, the inner content of the erythrocyte rapidly reduced the label facing the cytoplasm, thus creaging a spontaneous anisotropy of the labeling. The anisotropic distribution of spin-labeled phosphatidylcholine in the erythrocyte membrane was found to be stable at 22 and 37 degrees C for more than 4 h. It is therefore concluded that the rate of outside-inside and inside-outside transition is so slow that the anisotropic distribution of the phospholipids in the erythrocyte membrane can be maintained during cell life.  相似文献   

5.
We have synthesized spin-labeled analogues of phosphatidylcholine, phosphatidylserine, and phosphatidylethanolamine with a short beta chain (C5) bearing a doxyl group at the fourth position. When added to an erythrocyte suspension, the labels immediately incorporate in the membrane. The orientation of the spin-labels was assessed in the bilayer (i) by addition in the medium of a nonpermeant reducer (ascorbate at 5 degrees C) or (ii) by following spontaneous reduction at 37 degrees C due to the endogenous reducing agents present in the cytosol. Both techniques prove that the spin-labels are originally incorporated in the outer leaflet and redistribute differently after incubation. After a 5-h incubation at 5 degrees C, the phosphatidylcholine derivative remained in the outer layer, while the phosphatidylethanolamine and phosphatidylserine derivatives were found principally in the inner leaflet. During the incubation, a small fraction of the spin-labels is hydrolyzed, particularly the phosphatidylserine derivative, presumably by an endogenous phospholipase A2. Because the hydrolyzed spin-labeled fatty acids are rejected in the aqueous phase, the spectra of the intact membrane-bound phospholipids can be obtained by an adequate spectral subtraction. The ESR spectrum corresponding to a probe in the outer leaflet indicates a more restricted motion than that associated with probes in the inner leaflet. Additional experiments have been carried out to prove that the difference in viscosity, which is likely to be due to anisotropic cholesterol distribution, is not attributable to modification of the cell morphology.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

6.
Ca2+-induced phase separation in phosphatidylserine/phosphatidylethanolamine and phosphatidylserine/phosphatidylethanolamine/phosphatidylcholine model membranes was studied using spin-labeled phosphatidylethanolamine and phosphatidylcholine and compared with that in phosphatidylserine/phosphatidylcholine model membranes studied previously. The phosphatidylethanolamine-containing membranes behaved in qualitatively the same way as did phosphatidylserine/phosphatidylcholine model membranes. There were some quantitative differences between them. The degree of phase separation was higher in the phosphatidylethanolamine-containing membranes. For example, the degree of phase separation in phosphatidylserine/phosphatidylethanolamine membranes containing various mole fractions of phosphatidylserine was 94--100% at 23 degrees C and 84--88% at 40 degrees C, while the corresponding value for phosphatidylserine/phosphatidylcholine membranes was 74--85% at 23 degrees C and 61--79% at 40 degrees C. Ca2+ concentration required for the phase separation was lower for phosphatidylserine/phosphatidylethanolamine than that for phosphatidylserine/phosphatidylcholine membranes; concentration to cause a half-maximal phase separation was 1.4 . 10(-7) M for phosphatidylserine-phosphatidylethanolamine and 1.2 . 10(-6) M for phosphatidylserine/phosphatidylcholine membranes. The phase diagram of phosphatidylserine/phosphatidylethanolamine membranes in the presence of Ca2+ was also qualitatively the same as that of phosphatidylserine/phosphatidylcholine except for the different phase transition temperatures of phosphatidylethanolamine (17 degrees C) and phosphatidylcholine (-15 degrees C). These differences were explained in terms of a greater tendency for phosphatidylethanolamine, compared to phosphatidylcholine, to form its own fluid phase separated from the Ca2+-chelated solid-phase phosphatidylserine domain.  相似文献   

7.
Spin labeled analogs of phosphatidylcholine were used to study the transverse diffusion (flip-flop) of phospholipids in the erythrocyte membrane. The nitroxide spin label was placed either on the β acyl chain or on the choline group. These labeled phosphatidylcholine molecules were incorporated into the membrane by incubation of the red cells at 22°C with sonicated spin-labeled phosphatidylcholine vesicles from which all traces of free fatty acids and lyso derivatives were carefully removed by bovine serum albumin treatment. This incorporation did not provide any change in the morphology of the cell as indicated by scanning electron microscopy. When spin-labeled phosphatidylcholine, having a nitroxide on the β chain but near the polar head-group, was incorporated into the erythrocyte membrane, ascorbate treatment at 0dgC allows selective reduction of the signal coming from the outer layer of the membrane. When the label was on the polar head-group, the inner content of the erythrocyte rapidly reduced the label facing the cytoplasm, thus creating a spontaneous anisotropy of the labeling. The anisotropic distribution of spin-labeled phosphatidylcholine in the erythrocyte membrane was found to be stable at 22 and 37°C for more than 4 h. It is therefore concluded that the rate of outside-inside and inside-outside transition is so slow that the anisotropic distribution of the phospholipids in the erythrocyte membrane can be maintained during cell life.  相似文献   

8.
Spin-labeled phosphatidylcholine was incorporated into the membrane of isolated “inner membrane+matrix” particles of rat liver mitochondria by incubation with sonicated spin-labeled phosphatidylcholine vesicles at 22°C. When the spin label was on the acyl chain the incorporation of phosphatidylcholine into the membrane was stimulated by the presence of the phosphatidylcholine exchange protein extracted from rat or beef liver. On the other hand no stimulation was observed when the nitroxide was on the polar head-group.When spin-labeled phosphatidylcholine was incorporated into the mitochondrial membrane in the absence of phosphatidylcholine exchange protein, ascorbate treatment at O°C reduced the EPR signal of the spin-labeled membranes by approximately 50%, indicating that fusion incorporates molecules equally on both sides of the membrane. On the other hand when spin-labeled phosphatidylcholine was incoporated in the presence of the exchange protein most of the EPR signal could be destroyed by the ascorbate treatment at 0°C, indicating that the spin-labeled phosphatidylcholine had been selectively incorporated in the outer layer of the membrane. Finally when the label is on the polar head-group the inner content of mitochondria reduces the label facing the matrix, thus creating again an anisotropy of the labeling.The anisotropic distribution of spin-labeled phosphatidylcholine in the mitochondrial membrane was found to be stable at 25°C for more than 2 h. It is therefore concluded that the rate of outside-inside and inside-outside transitions are extremely slow (half-life greater than 24 h).  相似文献   

9.
To identify the specific component(s) in the target membrane involved in fusion of vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV), we examined the interaction of the virus with human erythrocyte membranes with asymmetric and symmetric bilayer distributions of phospholipids. Fusion was monitored spectrofluorometrically by the octadecylrhodamine dequenching assay. Fusion of VSV with lipid-symmetric erythrocyte ghosts was rapid at 37 degrees C and low pH, whereas little or no fusion was observed with lipid-asymmetric ghosts. Conversion of phosphatidylserine in the lipid-symmetric ghost membrane to phosphatidylethanolamine by means of the enzyme phosphatidylserine decarboxylase did not alter the target membrane's susceptibility to VSV fusion. Spin-labeled phospholipid analogues with phosphatidylserine, phosphatidylethanolamine, and phosphatidylcholine headgroups incorporated into the outer leaflet of lipid-asymmetric erythrocytes did not render those membranes fusogenic. Electron spin resonance spectra showed an increased mobility of a phosphatidylcholine spin-label incorporated into the outer leaflet of lipid-symmetric erythrocyte ghosts as compared to that of lipid-asymmetric ghosts. These results indicate that the susceptibility to VSV fusion is not dependent on any particular phospholipid but rather is related to packing characteristics of the target membrane.  相似文献   

10.
When human erythrocytes are incubated with spin-labeled analogues of sphingomyelin, phosphatidylcholine, phosphatidylserine, or phosphatidylethanolamine, with a short beta chain (C5) bearing a doxyl group at the fourth carbon position, the labeled lipids incorporate readily in the outer monolayer. The incorporation is followed in fresh erythrocytes by a selective inward diffusion of the amino derivatives. This observation led us to postulate the existence of a selective ATP-dependent system that would flip aminophospholipids from the outer to the inner monolayer [Seigneuret, M., & Devaux, P. F. (1984) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 81, 3751-3755]. This study further examines the nature of this selective transport and demonstrates that it is mediated by a specific membrane protein. By measurement of the initial rate of transverse diffusion of spin-labeled lipids incorporated at various concentrations in the membrane outer leaflet of packed erythrocytes, apparent Km values were determined for the phosphatidylserine and phosphatidylethanolamine analogues. A ratio of approximately equal to 1/9.4 [corrected] was obtained (KmPS/KmPE). Using spin-labels bearing either a 14N or a 15N isotope, we have carried out competition experiments allowing us to measure simultaneously the transport of two different phospholipids. By this procedure, we show that phosphatidylserine and phosphatidylethanolamine compete for the same transport site but that phosphatidylserine has a higher affinity, in agreement with a lower apparent Km. On the other hand, the slow diffusion of the phosphatidylcholine or sphingomyelin analogues has no influence on the transport of phosphatidylserine or phosphatidylethanolamine. Experiments carried out in ghosts loaded with ATP enabled us to determine the activation energies for phosphatidylserine and phosphatidylcholine transverse diffusion.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

11.
To elucidate the role of phospholipid asymmetry in calcium-phosphate-induced fusion of human erythrocytes, we examined the interaction of erythrocyte membranes with asymmetric and symmetric bilayer distributions of phospholipids. Fusion of human erythrocytes was monitored by light microscopy as well as spectrophotometrically by the octadecylrhodamine dequenching assay. Phospholipid translocation and distribution between the inner and the outer leaflet of intact red blood cells were determined with spin-labeled phosphatidylserine (PS), phosphatidylethanolamine (PE), and phosphatidylcholine (PC). Significant fusion of lipid-asymmetric red blood cells where PS and PE are predominantly oriented to the inner leaflet was only observed at Ca2+ concentrations greater than or equal to 10 mM (in the presence of 10 mM phosphate buffer) while fusion of lipid-symmetric erythrocyte membranes was established at greater than or equal to 1.5 mM Ca2+. The Ca2+ threshold of fusion of lipid-asymmetric red blood cells was significantly reduced (i) after exposure of PS to the outer layer but not after redistribution of PE alone, and (ii) upon incorporation of spin-labeled PS into the outer leaflet of red blood cells. Spin-labeled PE or PC did not affect fusion, suggesting that the serine headgroup is an important factor in calcium-phosphate-induced fusion.  相似文献   

12.
Two steps were required for ATP-dependent endocytosis in resealed erythrocyte ghosts. The first step required incubation with Mg-ATP at 37 °C, while the second step required primaquine and occurred at 0 or at 37 °C. These two steps were apparently also required for ATP-dependent endocytosis in erythrocytes. Endocytosis in white ghosts was similar to that in resealed ghosts and erythrocytes; the main difference was that the requirement of primaquine for the second step was less strict in white ghosts; in them, appreciable endocytosis took place with no added primaquine. Nonetheless, endocytosis in all three types of cells was stimulated by primaquine. The fluidity of the membranes as sensed by spin-labeled phosphatidylcholine was measured with and without primaquine. The fluidity of erythrocytes was increased by addition of primaquine or by conversion of the erythrocytes to white ghosts; the effect primaquine had on the fluidity of white ghosts was not detectable by the spin label. This suggested that a fluidizing or loosening of the membrane structure was required for the second step of ATP-dependent endocytosis, and that this loosening could be accomplished either by primaquine or by the process of preparing white ghosts.  相似文献   

13.
The physical properties of lipid bilayers with a similar composition to the outer and inner leaflets of the human erythrocyte membrane have been examined in protein-free model systems. The outer leaflet (OL) was represented by a phospholipid mixture containing phosphatidylcholine and sphingomyelin extracted from human erythrocytes, while a mixture of phosphatidylcholine, phosphatidylserine and phosphatidylethanolamine represented the inner leaflet (IL). The ratio of cholesterol to phospholipid was varied in both mixtures. The lateral diffusion coefficient of fluorescent phospholipids diluted in such lipid mixtures was determined by the modulated fringe pattern photobleaching technique. Contrast curves with a single exponential decay, indicative of homogeneous samples, were obtained only for temperatures above 15 °C and for a cholesterol to phospholipid molar ratio below 0.8. The rate of lateral diffusion was approximately five times faster in IL than in OL multilayers, in agreement with former results obtained in human erythrocytes (Morrot et al. 1986). Varying the cholesterol to phospholipid ratio from 0 to 0.8 (mol/mol) enabled us to decrease the diffusion constant by only a factor of approximately 2 for both IL and OL mixtures. The order parameter of a spin-labeled phospholipid was determined in the different systems and found to be systematically smaller in IL mixtures than in OL mixtures. The present study indicates that the difference in lipid diffusivity of the two erythrocyte leaflets may be accounted for solely by a difference in phospholipid composition, and may be independent of cholesterol and protein asymmetry.Abbreviations OL outer leaflet - IL inner leaflet - RBC red blood cell - NBD-PC 1-acyl-2-[12-(7-nitrobenz-2-oxa-1,3-diazol-4-yl) amino] dodecanoyl phosphatidylcholine - NBD-PE 1-acyl-2-[12-(7-nitrobenz-2-oxa-1,3-diazol-4-yl)amino] dodecanoyl phosphatidylethanolamine - NBD-PS 1-acyl-2-[12-(7-nitrobenz-2-oxy-1,3-diazol-4-yl)amino] dodecanoyl phosphatidylserine - DMPC 1,2 dimyristoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine - DMPS 1,2 dimyristoyl-snglycero-3-phosphoserine - PC phosphatidyleholine - C/P cholesterol over phospholipid molar ratio - D lateral diffusion coefficient - S order parameter - ESR electron spin resonance - NMR nuclear magnetic resonance - EDTA ethylene diamine tetraacetic acid - TRIS tris-(hydroxymethyl)amino ethane Offprint requests to: P. F Devaux  相似文献   

14.
BHK 21 cells can adhere to a protein-coated plastic dish in the presence of Ca2+ at temperatures above 12 degrees C. However, they cannot adhere below 8 degrees C. The ESR spectrum of cells spin-labeled with a stearic acid label indicated that the membrane fluidity changed characteristically at 10 degrees C, 20 degrees C, and 30 degrees C. The critical temperature for cell adhesion coincided well with one of the characteristic temperatures for the membrane fluidity change. In the case of adhesion in the presence of Mg2+, no such correlation was observed.  相似文献   

15.
We have studied in Torpedo marmorata electric organ synaptosomes the equilibration kinetics of spin-labeled phospholipid analogues initially incorporated into the outer plasma membrane monolayer. As assayed by evoked releases of both ATP and acetylcholine, the nerve endings were closed vesicles containing an energy source. The aminophospholipids (phosphatidylethanolamine and phosphatidylserine) were translocated toward the inner membrane leaflet faster and to a higher extent than their choline-containing counterparts (phosphatidylcholine and sphingomyelin). This difference was abolished by incubation of synaptosomal membranes with N-ethylmaleimide, suggesting that the accumulation of aminophospholipids in the inner layer was driven by a protein. This phenomenon is comparable with what was described in plasma membranes of other eucaryotic cells (erythrocyte, lymphocyte, platelet, fibroblast), and thus we would suggest that an aminophospholipid translocase, capable of moving the aminophospholipids from the outer to the inner layer at the expense of ATP, is also present in the synaptosomal plasma membrane.  相似文献   

16.
After incubation of human erythrocytes at 37 degrees C in the absence of glucose (A) for 24 h, (B) for 4 h with 8 mM hexanol or (C) for 3 h with SH reagents, phosphatidylethanolamine becomes partly susceptible to hydrolysis by phospholipase A2 from Naja naja. The presence of glucose during the pretreatments suppresses this effect, except in the case of SH reagents that inhibit glycolysis. After incubation with tetrathionate, up to 45% of the phosphatidylethanolamine is degraded by the enzyme, an amount considerably in excess of the 20% attacked in fresh erythrocytes. Pancreatic phospholipase A2, an enzyme unable to hydrolyse the phospholipids of intact erythrocytes, partially degrades phosphatidylcholine and phosphatidylethanolamine of erythrocytes pretreated with hexanol or SH reagents. Reagents capable of oxidizing SH groups to disulfides (tetrathionate, o-iodosobenzoate and hydroquinone) even render susceptible to pancreatic phospholipase A2 phosphatidylserine, a phospholipid supposed to be entirely located in the inner lipid layer of the membrane. Alkylating or acylating SH reagents have no such effect. It is postulated that disulfide bond formation between membrane protein SH groups leads to an alteration in protein-phospholipid interactions and consequently induces a reorientation of phospholipids between the inner and the outer membrane lipid layer.  相似文献   

17.
The distribution of phospholipids over outer and inner layers of the plasma membranes of Friend erythroleukemic cells (Friend cells) and mature mouse erythrocytes has been determined. The various techniques which have been applied to establish the phospholipid localization include the following: phospholipase A2, phospholipase C, and sphingomyelinase C treatment, fluorescamine labeling of phosphatidylethanolamine, and a phosphatidylcholine transfer protein mediated exchange procedure. The data obtained with these different techniques were found to be in good agreement with each other. Phosphatidylcholine, phosphatidylethanolamine, and phosphatidylinositol were found to be distributed symmetrically over both layers of the plasma membrane of Friend cells. In contrast, sphingomyelin was found to be enriched in the outer layer of the membrane (80-85%), and phosphatidylserine appeared to be present mainly in the inner layer (80-90%). From these results, it was calculated that the outer and inner layers accounted for 46% and 54%, respectively, of the total phospholipid complement of that membrane. Analogous studies on the plasma membrane of mature mouse erythrocytes showed that the transbilayer distribution of the total phospholipid mass appeared to be the same as in the plasma membrane of the Friend cell, namely, 46% and 54% in outer and inner layers, respectively. The outer layer of this membrane contains 57% of the phosphatidylcholine, 20% of the phosphatidylethanolamine, 85% of the sphingomyelin, and 42% of the phosphatidylinositol, and none of the phosphatidylserine was present.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

18.
We have measured the transbilayer diffusion at 4 degrees C of spin labeled analogs of sphingomyelin, phosphatidylcholine, phosphatidylethanolamine, phosphatidylserine and phosphatidic acid in the human erythrocyte membrane. Measurements were also carried out in ghosts, released without ATP, and on large unilamellar vesicles made with total lipid extract. As reported previously (Seigneuret, M. and Devaux, P.F. (1984) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 81, 3751-3755), the amino phospholipids are rapidly transported from the outer to the inner leaflet on fresh erythrocytes, whereas phosphatidylcholine diffuses slowly. We now show that phosphatidic acid behaves like phosphatidylcholine: approximately 10% is internalized in 5 h at 4 degrees C. Under the same experimental conditions, no inward transport of sphingomyelin can be detected. In ghosts resealed without ATP, all glycerophospholipids tested diffuse slowly from the outer to the inner leaflet (approx. 10% in 5 h) while no transport of sphingomyelin is seen. Finally in lipid vesicles, the inward diffusion of all glycerophospholipids is less than 2% in 5 h and a very small transport of sphingomyelin can be measured. These results confirm the existence of a selective inward aminophospholipid transport of fresh erythrocytes and suggest a slow and passive diffusion of all phospholipids on ghosts, resealed without ATP, as well as on lipid vesicles.  相似文献   

19.
A Arora  D Marsh 《Biophysical journal》1998,75(6):2915-2922
The change in vertical location of spin-labeled N-biotinyl phosphatidylethanolamine in fluid-phase dimyristoyl phosphatidylcholine bilayer membranes, on binding avidin to the biotinyl headgroup, has been investigated by progressive saturation electron spin resonance measurements. Spin-labeled phospholipids were present at a concentration of 1 mol%, relative to total membrane lipids. For avidin-bound N-biotinyl phosphatidylethanolamine spin-labeled on the 8 C atom of the sn-2 chain, the relaxation enhancement induced by 30 mM Ni2+ ions confined to the aqueous phase was 2.5 times that induced by saturating molecular oxygen, which is preferentially concentrated in the hydrophobic core of the membrane. For phosphatidylcholine also spin-labeled at the 8 position of the sn-2 chain, this ratio was reversed: the relaxation enhancement by Ni2+ ions was half that induced by molecular oxygen. In the absence of avidin, the enhancement by either relaxant was the same for both spin-labeled phospholipids. For a double-labeled system, in which both N-biotinyl phosphatidylethanolamine and phosphatidylcholine were spin-labeled on the 12 C atom of the sn-2 chain, the relaxation rate in the absence of avidin was greater than that predicted from linear additivity of the corresponding singly labeled systems, because of mutual spin-spin interactions between the two labeled lipid species. On binding of avidin to the N-biotinyl phosphatidylethanolamine, this relaxation enhancement by mutual spin-spin interaction was very much decreased. These results indicate that, on binding of avidin to the lipid headgroup, N-biotinyl phosphatidylethanolamine is lifted vertically within the membrane, relative to the phosphatidylcholine host lipids. The specific binding of avidin to N-biotinyl phosphatidylethanolamine parallels the liftase activity proposed for activator proteins associated with the action of certain gangliosidases.  相似文献   

20.
1. When complete hydrolysis of glycerophosphlipids and sphingomyelin in the outer membrane leaflet is brought about by treatment of intact red blood cells with phospholipase A2 and sphingomyelinase C, the (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-ATPase activity is not affected. 2. Complete hydrolysis of sphingomyelin, by treatment of leaky ghosts with spingomyelinase C, does not lead to an inactivation of the (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-ATPase. 3. Treatment of ghosts with phospholipase A2 (from either procine pancreas of Naja naja venom), under conditions causing an essentially complete hydrolysis of the total glycerophospholipid fraction of the membrane, results in inactivation of the (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-ATPase by some 80--85%. The residual activity is lost when the produced lyso-compounds (and fatty acids) are removed by subsequent treatment of the ghosts with bovine serum albumin. 4. The degree of inactivation of the (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-ATPase, caused by treatment of ghosts with phospholipase C, is directly proportional to the percentage by which the glycerophospholipid fraction in the inner membrane layer is degraded. 5. After essentially complete inactivation of the (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-ATPase by treatment of ghosts with phospholipase C from Bacillus cereus, the enzyme is reactivated by the addition of any of the glycerophospholipids, phosphatidylserine, phosphatidylcholine, phosphatidylethanolamine or lysophosphatidylcholine, but not by addition of sphingomyeline, free fatty acids or the detergent Triton X-100. 6. It is concluded that only the glycerophospholipids in the human erythrocyte membrane are involved in the maintenance of the (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-ATPase activity, and in particular that fraction of these phospholipids located in the inner half of the membrane.  相似文献   

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